- Pull rf_FreePhysDiskAddr() out from under a #ifdef, since we're now
going to use it.
- Add a pda_cleanup_list into the DAG header. Use it in rf_FreeDAG() to
cleanup any PDA's that get allocated but have no "easy" way of being
located and freed when the DAG completes.
- numStripeUnitsAccessed is a per-stripe value, and has a maximum
value equal to the number of colums (thus limited by RF_MAXCOL).
Use this knowledge to set a high-bound on overlappingPDAs, and stuff
it on the stack instead of malloc'ing it all the time! This costs us
a whopping 40 bytes on the stack, but saves a malloc() and a free().
elements from the pools.
Re-work rf_SelectAlgorithm() to get rid of all the 8 malloc's, and to
use the new functions to get/put these 'support structures'. I'm not
overly happy with some of the variable names, but them's the breaks.
In the process of changing things, fix a bug:
- in the case where we can't create a dag, free asmh_b and blockFuncs
too!!
[if you were able to look at the source code related to these changes,
and comprehend what was going on without having your eyes bleed or
getting dizzy, please contact me... I'm sure I'll have more code
which would benefit by you having a look at it before I commit it :) ]
As we turn the chip to big-endian mode on big-endian systems, we should
never byte-swap the data read/written from/to registers. Tested on sparc64.
Finally fix kern/13341 by Jason R. Thorpe (really, the hard work of putting
bus_dmamap_sync() calls at the right places has been done my Jason mid-2001 :)
- factor out common code.
- don't stop searching before the target.
- touch the correct object.
- validate the argument before the loop otherwise we need to roll back.
Trimm the priority, as the upper layers won't do it and will drop the packet
if priority is not 0.
While there, print the revision in the "unsupported chip revision" printf.
such that we don't actually hold a simplelock while we are doing
a pool_get(), but that we still effectively protecting critical code.
This should fix all of the outstanding LOCKDEBUG warnings related to
rebuilding RAID sets.
Provide rf_AllocDAGNode() and rf_FreeDAGNode() to handle
allocation/freeing.
- Introduce a "nodes" linked list of RF_DagNode_t's into the DAG header.
Initialize nodes in InitHdrNode(). Arrange for nodes cleanup in rf_FreeDAG().
- Add a "list_next" to RF_DagNode_t to keep track of nodes on the
above "nodes" list. (This is distinct from the "next" field of
RF_DagNode_t, which keeps track of the firing order of nodes.)
"list_next" gets used in the cleanup routines, and in traversing
through a set of nodes that belong to a particular set of nodes
(e.g. those belonging to xorNodes for a given DAG).
- use rf_AllocDAGNode() instead of mallocs of variable-sized arrays of
RF_DagNode_t's. Mostly mechanical changes to convert the DAG construction
from "access nodes via an array index" to "access nodes via a 'nextnode'
pointer".
- rework a couple of tricky spots where assumptions about the node order
was being abused.
- performance remains consistent with performance before these changes.
[Thanks to Simon Burge (simonb at you.know.where) for looking over
the mechanical changes to make sure I didn't biff anything.]
This is an incompatible change, and will break all existing cgd images
encrypted with blowfish. Users will need to dump their data before
booting a kernel with this change, and recreate cgd's and restore data
afterwards.
I believe this affects a very small number of users other than myself;
indeed after several alert mails in an attempt to find them, only 2
such users have come forward. They have both agreed the requirement
for backwards compatibility does not warrant the effort nor the mess
in the code. This code does exist, if it should later prove to be
needed, but will not be in the tree.
Further, by the nature of the issue, I have strong reasons to believe
that, even if they missed these mails, there would be few other users
of blowfish who update their systems with any regularity; any such
users would have tripped over the problem in the same way I did when
it was first found over a year ago.
The problem stems from two issues with the underlying blowfish
encryption routines used by cgd:
- they take key length arguments counted in bytes, rather than bits
like all the opther ciphers.
- they silently truncate any keys longer than an internal limit,
rather than returning an error (which would have exposed the
previous discrepancy immediately).
As a result, the kernel reads too much data as the key from cgdconfig,
and then truncates most of it. This can easily be demonstrated/tested.
Currently, Blowfish users will find that if they mis-enter the cgd
passphrase on the first attempt, when validation fails and cgdconfig
prompts for the passphrase again, the cgd will not correctly configure
even when given a correct passphrase.
driver. Still some issues:
* framebuffer setup seems incomplete. Some drawing primitives work 100%
of the time, while others fail one in ten tries. Perhaps my board is
slightly broken, as the exact model as probed by ARCS seems to shift
between Elan and XS24 from time to time.
* characters are drawn bottom-up rather than top-down (as the wsfont
definitions expect).